tv Your World With Neil Cavuto FOX News September 6, 2016 1:00pm-2:01pm PDT
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i would be remiss if i did not thank my friends and colleagues, stewart barney and charles payne and maria bartiromo and the executive producer of this fine, fine show, pam ritter. if i didn't acknowledge all their hard work in my absence but like adele says, it is time to say hello again to the real host of this show. now, the news. so many say it is like riding a bike. you are gone for a few months and you still have the hang of it. i love you all and your support. it comes on a day the campaign is heating up. i felt bad missing the convention. i don't feel bad missing this latest drama and it involves one hillary clinton going after donald trump and specifically talking more and more with reporters. this time, about these investigations and whether there
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is much ado about nothing. listen to this. >> i believe i have created so many jobs in the sort of conspiracy theory machine factory. honestly, they never quit. they quit coming back, as i said, over and over again. it doesn't matter how many times you ask me and how you ask me, these issues will be decided after the election. >> as many of you know, we always want to hear from both sides. if we only have one side, we drop it. mark cuban defending hillary clinton. the billionaire, saying, wait a minute. don't do the pile on thing. former presidential candidate, pat buchanon in washington with the fallout from all of this. she is talking more to the press. she was pretty defiant today. what do you think? >> well, first, welcome back, my friend. good to see you after your summer. >> thank you very much. >> i think she is doing a wise
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thing, a necessary thing in meeting more with the press. she has gone six or eight months without speak with the press. this matter of the clinton foundation is a very serious matter. you have thousands of e-mails that have been discovered and she, herself, says there is a lot of smoke there but no fire. these are going to be rolling out. i think there is a real serious potential for an explosion this fall, and if not then, if she won the presidency, you are going to have these come out all the way in the first months of her presidency. i think you have a real potential down the road with this foundation for an independent council in the first year of the clinton administration if there were one. >> pat, has the fbi reviewed these? >> certainly, they have some of them but when they start dropping the note, you have people who are experts on these and making connections. all you need, neal, is one quid
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pro quo for something done by the state department for someone who contributed to the foundation that looks like it is a possible bribe. all of the sudden, you have enough information to call an independent counsel. this is somewhat like the knicks on nixon tapes. americans were not early on. they just knew that the more charges came up and suspicious activity, even if it didn't seem criminal in the beginning, it was hurting and eroding nixon support. that was something that developed over a year. in the next couple of months, is it going to move the needle? >> if something breaks, i think certainly. when these e-mails drop out there, every one of them is a story that leads to another story, that leads to another person. i think it is going to be a
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steady bleeding of hillary clinton. truth be told, neal, she came off the conventions very far, almost decisively ahead. the last ten days, partly because of these e-mails and revelations, you have polls that show that donald trump is tied with her or slightly ahead. she has been losing the last two weeks. i think one of the reasons she is doing these interviews now and going public, i think she has been advised, you can't go through two more months with these things dropping. >> do you get the impression that democrats are on defense. as you have reminded me, moment changes. the president on defense in asia and dealing with foreign leaders and tips with him and the philippine leaders not meeting, do you remember a time a leader would skip meeting with another leader because of a personal
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insult? >> i don't blame the president for not meeting with the president of the fiphilippines after he called him a s.o.b. in public. take a look at what's happening. the chinese disrespected the prepr president by making him get out of the jump seat. >> that is not barack obama's fault? >> but they did that to barack obama. mr. putin is in the face of the president of the united states. north koreans fire off free ballistic missiles during the conference. the united states is not only in a measure of retreat. it is being challenge. the president of the united states is being personally challenged. i think we're in for some tough times in the next administration no matter who is president. >> do you get a sense real quickly about the momentum here, that even though the polls have tightened electorally, they have not titled.
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in the battleground states, hillary clinton is comfortably ahead. that puts trump in a problem. >> i think hillary right now if you held the election, given her lead in the battleground states would be elected. i do believe the momentum is clearly with trump. i think you will find some people that are astonished that trump is two ahead in the cnn poll. ten days or two weeks ago, trump was behind eight points nationally and ten points in some of these battleground states. i think when the wave of polls comes out of the battleground states, wisconsin showed it closing. if they showed trump closing there, i think you are going to see a measure of panic in the democratic party for the reason that nothing good is going to come out of these e-mails and revelations. the only nithing that can come t are problems. >> good to see you. >> good seeing you back. >> pat buchanon.
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mark cuban, the billionaire owner of the dallas mavericks, you thinks the market, regardless of what was happening today, is due for a serious correction, maybe even a crash should donald trump become president. cuban is going to explain why after this. it's not just a car... it's your daily retreat. 1y50irksds he . the es and es hybrid. this is the pursuit of perfection. remember here at ally, nothing stops us from doing right by our customers. who's with me? i'm in. i'm in. i'm in. i'm in. ♪ ♪ one, two, - wait, wait. wait - where's tina?
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every on-time arrival is backed by thousands of od employees, ...who make sure the millions of products we ship arrive without damages. because od employees treat customer service... ...like our most important delivery. od. helping the world keep promises. do you know what happened to angela markle in germany? the german leader lost a crucial vote. her party is due to have the same fate next week end. similar rages in portugal and italy and france. some are calling it a donald trumpian rage. the world is going the way of let's protect our borders that has been a corner stone of nigel
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farage. good to have you here. >> thank you for your very kind note. appreciate that. let me ask you about what's going on here. there is something in the global well, not just in the united states. you have astutely picked up on this trend years ago whether people agree or disagree with you. i think the merkel pounding jeopardizes her very leadership and for that matter, the german leadership of europe. what's going on. >> let's get a set of context here. there is opposition grabbing over the course of the last few years to the whole p direction that global politics, global corporal politics has been done. what brexit has done is to give inspiration to everybody who believes in nation state democracy, controlling their borders and putting the interest of their people first. i see a big parallel of what's
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happening in germany. i was over in jacksonville, mississippi. i was at that trump rally. i met those people afterwards and they feel, those people in mississippi felt exactly the same as the people who voted for brexit and the people who came out and gave angela berkmerkel a bloody nose over the weekend. what we are asking for is portrayed by the international media business elites and political elites as if we are bad people advocating something extreme and dangerous. we are asking for normality. normal countries control their bore borders and look after their citizens. >> it does seem the trend but does invite the wrath of the united nations. they are saying you and donald trump were using isis-style propaganda. what do you make of that? >> i have been called many things over the years. a lot i wouldn't want my mom to hear. no one has ever compared me to
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isis. it shows the level of desperation these overbloated paid international bodies are sinking to. they see brexit as the first brick in the wall. they will do anything to stop donald trump. remember, they tried to stop brexit by using project fair. they are now going to use the same tactics against trump in this campaign. >> real quickly. the polls in germany over the weekend did not look like merkel's party would lose by the magnitude it did. i suspect people when they are polled on a subject do what they think is politically correct and vote otherwise. i am wondering if that is a trend we see happening again and again in europe and i suspect maybe in the united states. >> you are right. people are sometimes reluctant to tell pollsters how they will vote. the polling industry is
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virtually bankrupt. what they can't measure are nonvoters that get back engaged in the process. 2.5 million people turned out on the 23rd of june, helped us have our independence day and win that brexit referendum. no one thought it would happen. the experts and the commentary at the pollsters. i just have this feeling in my water that what has happened in the usa is that the trump campaign has the big "m," momentum behind it. i met the people in jacksonville after the rally. many of them had never voted in their lives. i would say to the commentators in america and globally and our friends that have abused me today at the united nations. you are in, i think now, for a very big shock. >> other countries are looking at the same that could change
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europe. thank you very much. mark cuban, the billionaire mavericks owner is supporting hillary clinton. there is talk he might play the role of donald trump to help him practice the debate. there is more to him than that. his market warning, something he says could be weeks ahead. that's after this. she spent summer binge-watching.
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you don't say this about mark cuban. he speaks his mind, whether you agree or disagree. what's ad, about a year ago, he had no real apparent problem with donald trump. now, he has been very critical of donald trump, specially trump's style. this sort of seinfeld campaign he told me a while ago is all about nothing. donald trump might disagree but cuban is sticking to it.
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>> donald has done a great job of setting the agenda for the media. the guy is a master at headline porn. you just want to deal with the headlines and not look what's underneath it. there is nobody better at it than him. that's not the decision-making. that's not what i look for when it comes to deciding who i want to vote for for president. at some point, somebody has to govern. at some point, he would have to understand policy. at some point, he would have to get into details. he just has not shown a talent for doing any of those things. >> has hillary clinton? >> i think she has. >> her own track record on her own past and e-mails released and flip-flops. >> look, all candidates flip-flop to a certain extent over the years. i don't hold that so much against donald. in terms of details, i'm happy to discuss the e-mails. the thing about hillary clinton, she is not good at communicating with the media. donald is a master of t the
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thing about the e-mails, people don't trust her judgment when it comes to classified information. she has never discussed what she actually did with classified information. the reality is, for 99.99% of the classified information she has dealt with, she did it in hard copy, paper, secured transfer. everything was done by the book. she didn't even use a p.c. for her i mail, she sent and received e-mails from a total of 13 people, that's it, 13 people. across those 13 people there were 68 classified threads. so over the course of four years. >> that we know of and 15,000 more out there. we don't know what they will ultimately show. >> that's not the case, that's not the case. the fbi went and interviewed everybody and anybody who connected with her via e-mail. anybody that communicated with her at all. >> on just an image, it looks
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weird when someone sets up their own private e-mail server as secretary of state of the united states. >> i don't think so. i am a tech guy. i set up e-mail servers. i had a business i bought and sold. >> you were never secretary of state. >> no, i wasn't but i understood the security elements of having a private server. >> you also knew the benefits of having a private server? >> yeah. in reality, it was to be more secure than what she would have done otherwise. to your point, look, she has done a horrible job communicating. she has tried to address the e-mails was a stand-alone issue when really the question is, how does she deal with classified information on a day-to-day basis. she has a great answer. she did it via hard copy but she has never used that answer. as i said, she doesn't do a good job explaining herself. >> the talk is you are sort of a defactor, behind the scenes supporter, trying to help her out, that you would even help her prepare by the debate by
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playing the role of donald trump p. is that true? >> yes. i haven't been asked but, would i do it? yes. >> have you volunteered it? >> no, we haven't brought it up at all. it is not like i talked to them every day. they ask me for my advice on small business, asked me to talk to my shark tank companies and get feedback for the elements that were important to them in terms of top to bottom, ranking and prioritizing them. she included a bunch of the things i got back from her small business proposal. she is responsive in that respect. >> i'm going to hobnob around here on this issue with the san francisco 49ers player, colin kaepernick, who sits during the national anthem. you kind of defended him tweeting that it has caused quite a bit of controversy. you were saying explaining why
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critics of kaepernick were wrong. he didn't throw a bomb, throw a punch, shut a business, yell at someone, troll anyone. he just sat there quietly. others have interpreted that as why now? you say what? >> in terms of why now? because it just happened now. i also tweeted after that that in terms of my family, my kids, my team, i'm going to suggest and my family i'm going to require that they put their hands over their heart and they stand for the national anthem, the pledge of allegiance, god bless america. >> what if one of your mavericks players doesn't do it? >> it is his choice. i would discuss it with him. i would say, look, if this is the message you want to send, that's up to you. the point i was making in the first tweet, in this day and age, we don't have a lot of civil discourse. when somebody disagrees, we tend to march, punch, yell, scream. we tend to shoot.
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nothing that's positive. colin capper neck, he didn't put out a press release. he just didn't stand up. my point was, i respect somebody who, if you're going to take issue with something, particularly as important as standing for the national anthem, he did it in a noon violent manner when so many other people are creating conflict and causing situations that can lead to harm, if not death. he did it in a nonviolent manner. i think that's a positive. >> not intentionally, but you have picked fights with a lot of folks. jack welch, the latest, when you were taking him on for attack the clinton foundation and this idea that those who have helped the foundation out of pay for play were p rewarded. you wanted him to prove it. if he doesn't, he was throwing false accusations. is that the gist of it? >> it was absolutely
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intentional. i fry to pick wars with the people that should be able to defend themselves. my point with jack was, i don't know him, never met him, never talked to him, when he was the ceo of g.e., he got accused of a lot of things. i don't know what was true. i don't know what wasn't true. i would never accuse him of something without knowing the facts. that's exactly what jack welch has done. it is not the first time. he made accusations that the bureau of labor statistics with the unemployment rate was run by, what did he say, the guys in chicago or something like that? it is not the first time for him. i am just trying to make the point. only against the folks that should be able to have a foundation for what they are saying. >> you don't think there was ever anything that looked a little weird about those that attended clinton events and those that gave to the foundation? >> no. i'll tell you exactly why. you have to ask yourself what's the market for -- a former president giving a speech. that's one of the issues to be
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addressed. ronald reagan has gotten paid more than $1 million for a speech in 1989. he went to japan and gave two speeches. bill clinton got $250,000 for speeches. he gets paid a little more than i do. he was right inside the market. he wasn't getting paid more or less than the market. >> i know -- i didn't want to interrupt you. this is more than about events. this is for a foundation that ostensibly raises question about whether there is pay for play relationship. >> a pay for play relationship suggests that he is gaining money to give a favor, correct? in order to determine if there is any quid pro quo, there has to be some money destined for the tradeoff. my point is, the former president of the united states
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who has had a lot of experience creating health initiatives around the world and has a phenomenal brand, one of the best brands globally of anybody ever. for him to go to a foreign nation and say, look, if you give to my foundation, i'm going to provide you brand support and help you with your health initiative, your going to be perceived in a much more positive light, because you are working for me. >> why when his wife makes an appearance as a future candidate -- i guess we can argue this back and forth. >> but, they have been investigated more than anybody. they have turned over all their e-mails. they have talked to everybody who has ever e-mailed them. >> they didn't actually turn them over. it took multiple court orders to get the latest stack we have. >> i want to make this point, the fbi talked to everybody na she e-mailed. whenever e-mail, there are two sides, the sender and the receiver. >> this is not a big deal.
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>> it is a nonevent. >> on the markets in general, are you worried after a pretty quiet august, you are a pretty good investor, that we are in for a rocky fall. everybody worries about that as we get to the fall? >> are you? >> yes, absolutely. we don't know what we don't know. i think there are so many external global influences on our market, what money comes here when there is uncertainly overseas, what money goes into treasuries, where does it go if rates go higher or lower. there is the uncertainty of the election. i have my trump hedge on. in the event donald wins, i have no doubt in my mind the market tanks. i literal have put on more than 100 hedge that i will put on stronger. >> what does that mean, if donald trump wins in november, what is mark cuban doing? >> if the polls look like there is a decent chance that donald
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could win, i will put a huge hedge on that's over 100% of my equity positions and my bond position as well that protects me just in case he wins. >> what is so horrible about that prospect? >> i just think all the uncertainty. we don't know what donald trump's plans are. right now, all we know are a little bit about his immigration, which tend to change on a day-to-day basis. we know he is going to reduce taxes significantly. when you reduce taxes significantly, there is a timeline involved. everybody is going to put off selling and doing anything until next year, because of the drop in tax rates if he is able to get it passed. because of that, you are going to see a huge selloff, i think, in stocks, because people will take advantage of any type of tax gain. who knows if the flip side comes through to prop it back up. i don't know. i can go through 20 other things. the bottom line is, of all the things we can discuss, the one
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thing the markets hate is uncertainty. right now with donald, there is uncertainty. on the global peace basis, all you have to do is say the wrong thing one time and. >> history can be a fickle thing. thank you so much for taking the time. >> any time. i am so glad you are back. continued health. >> nathank you, my friend. >> mark cuban has already put himself out there. if donald wins the election, the market is going to tank. fair and balanced. a certain dr. ben carson on the guy is all wet. because the ultimate expression of power, is control. this is the pursuit of perfection.
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upgrade your phone system and learn how you could save at vonage.com/business well, i guess if mark cuban is right, enjoy this while you still can, the dow advancing as we get things moving in september. it is going to be short-lived. if donald trump gets elected, kaplui. dr. ben carson, former presidential candidate, might disagree with that. >> good to have you back, neil. great to hear your voice again. >> thank you very much, doctor. you heard what cuban is saying. there is so much uncertainty around the prospect of the trump
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presidency, on his elec, should it come to that, people are going to panic. what do you think? >> well, he articulates very well the concerns of many of the never trump people and some of the republicans that don't want to go his way, because they would much prefer to have certainty. even if it is certainty that's enveloped in corruption. that's what hillary clinton represents for them. they know what she is going to do. they know she can be controlled. she can be bought. now, when you bring someone in like donald trump, he is a wild card. they haven't faced this for a very, very long time. they don't know what to do. >> a lot of them don't know what to do because he has not been consistent on issues of he could trigger a trade war or take retaliation against companies that hire abroad. how can you alay them as somebody who supports mr.
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trump's concerns, that he is not going to be crazy? >> if you talk to him, when you sit down and talk to him and you ferret these things out, for instance, he talks about penalties for companies that go overseas. when you sit down and talk to him, you recognize that he is saying, let's fix the environment that's forcing them to go overseas. if they still choose to do that, let's make sure we penalize them. >> that's not what he said in the very beginning when you guys were debating on the same stage and were you still in the same race. he was going to penalize them first, in the case of ford going to mexico. i'm going to zap a tax on you for doing so. do you think maybe with the best of intentions he is sending mixed messages and confusing people? >> well, he is sending messages that a nonpolitician might send by not laying the foundation very frequently for the things that he says. when you come back and you talk to him and you ferret it out,
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you find out that the foundation is there. he just is in the process of learning how to lay that foundation first. >> doctor, while i still have you, barack obama decided not to meet with the leader of the philippines in asia because this guy had said a lot of horrible stuff about the president and his mother and all of this. he decided not to meet with him. now, leaders always have personal gripes with one another. they ultimately work together. do you agree with the president given the harsh tone of the filipino leader's remark that he is perfectly justified to say, no, i'm not going to meet with you? >> he certainly has a right not to meet with him or he has the right to be a bigger person and not necessarily let your actions be dictated by someone who is perhaps not acting in the most
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mature fashion. >> dr. carson, great seeing you again. thank you. >> you too, neil. >> dr. ben carson speaking of doctors as one who i am very grateful to. i am going to tell you about him. joe piscopo says that guy is the reason why i might have lost a few pounds. joe to remind me, there are easier ways to do this, though, after this. i'm glad you called. (announcer vo) all your phones can work together on one number. you can move calls between phones, so conversations can go where you go. take your time. i'm not going anywhere. (announcer vo) and when you're not available, one talk helps find the right person who is. hi, john. (announcer vo) so wherever work takes you, you can put your customers first. introducing one talk-- another way verizon connects your business better. learn how at onetalk.com. enepeople want power.hallenge.
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i've discovered if you want to use a few pounds, you can circumvent this whole treadmill thing and have your chest ripped open. joe piscopo has volunteered to do just that. i am going to tell you what the doctor actually did. joe, my good buddy from new jersey with me now. wow, apparently, that's one way to do it. >> neil cavuto is the gentleman's name.
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this swinging cool, cool cat is at the top of his game. ♪ this is your world neil cavuto ♪ ♪ right in that fox news hall of fame ♪ ♪ that is why neil cavuto is the champ ♪ welcome back, baby. >> you know, it wouldn't be politically correct. you are a cool, cool cat, baby. >> your health is good. you are in good shape. >> am i? i don't know. >> have you ever had a stress test. >> you know what, i have. you know what i'm doing now. you swear to stress test doesn't help, 3-d doesn't help. you have to get a quick cat scan of your heart and lungs. you always look healthy. your stamina, you do two hours on coast to coast. >> i didn't have any of the markers.
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it is a true story. >> when i did the stress test, i kept putting it off, you know you are in trouble when a bunch of guys in white lab coats start descending on you and say, why don't you come this way. >> that's scary. you can't tell. thank god you look good. my people, we go like this. thank god you look good. god bless you my son. >> you take very good care of yourself, right? >> i do, to the chagrin of my ex-wife, i do. i take good care of myself. i try to eat right. i don't drink anymore. >> i imagine even the ex-wife wants you around. >> what, are you kidding me? >> i do take good care of myself and i try to exercise. we'll go to the gym any time and work-out. >> is that what they do? it's very dangerous. >> you go to the hospital. >> so how are you doing now? you are going to be new jersey's next governor. that's pretty clear. >> we have very pertinent
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meetings, a meeting with the trump adviser, roger stone. i don't think he will mind me telling you that, just to feel it out. we know the answers. >> you have instant name recognition. >> the platform, am-970, on the radio. the platform is there. we know the issues. we answer all the problems of the state. let's sit down and talk. >> if you were governor, you have had within your power -- you don't owe them any money anymore? >> there wouldn't be any pay for play. >> i think i know what to do. with the tolls and the taxes alone and the estate tax and the inheritance tax, we can't do it anymore. >> it is the most taxed country. >> if i was rich like you, not a problem. i'm just a working stiff. >> you are a working stiff.
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♪ and now the beginning is near ♪ >> very good seeing you, man. >> i miss you. we missed you, neil cavuto. >> no, you didn't. you were here and you caused some controversy. do you know? >> i pushed buttons. >> i wondered when i heard you were booked. i bet we ticked him off. everybody who sat in the chair who i love, they never mentioned your name once. am i right or am i wrong? >> my producer, i had to introduce myself to her. >> in philadelphia, doing remotors. i had to say, this is neil's show. >> a lot of you. you don't have to be a premium member for this. you can see me in a hospital gown for free.
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i've been taking fish oil from nature's bounty to support my heart. i'm running, four times a week. eating better, keeping healthy. so that no matter what happens in the future, my "future self" will thank me. thank you! you're welcome! hey listen. whatever you do, don't marry dan! hey babe, i'm dan. hey babe, can i get 14 dollars for... thank you. 45 years of experience has taught us: no matter what the future holds, you're always better off healthy. nature's bounty
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noticed, i have been away for a little while. i had open heart surgery that, let's just say, i never really planned on. some of you write cavuto has a heart? i thought fox people had their heart surgically removed. oh, brooke. back to cnn. frankly, i was surprised. all this time i thought you were a robot. so much for those processed meats and cheeses, cavuto. not so fast. my husband and i were worried when we weren't seeing you on tv. we feared bill o'reilly had murdered you. i always suspected those cnbc guys were force feeding you yodels till in the hope you
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would croak. not you, cavuto. how did your heart surgeon break it to you that your junk food days were over? by ripping open my chest and telling me later, do you really want to do this again? please tell me your doctor wasn't a cnn fan. frankly, allen, i don't know. all i do know is he saved my life. i am alive and talking to you right now because this chairman of cardiothoracic surgery at lenox hill hospital and his incredible team refused to have it any other way. he had no control over my looks right after surgery. cnn, cnbc. you can blame dr. schneideschne if you're not happy to see me here, calling at all hours to make sure each day i was progressing. you can blame his surgeon skills, working around my
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slightly lumpy frame. you can blame his impossibliy, albeit professional staff of nurses who refused to let their long hours ever, ever blame the schneiderman team to returning the cavuto team to save america. all right. you think about that, dr. schneiderman, wherever you are. i think you folks have gotten to know me pretty well as a reporter. i try to do my due diligence, homework, my research. when i was going to need open heart surgery i pulled out all the stops to find the best doctor i could. as some of you know, when it comes to this sort of thing, it's kind of a big deal. >> i don't know how to put this, but i'm kind of a big deal. >> really? >> people know me. >> just how i roll, america.
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i know people who know people. and those people who know all seem to know jacob schneiderman. now i understand why. not only because he saved my life but the countless other lives for whom he and his team have provided another chance, another shot, another opportunity, another moment with families who feared the worst that rival news networks might have hoped for -- i joke, but to make the point that i'm here. i'm here with you right now. sort of like that alexander hamilton character in the broadway show who just screams i'm not going to miss my shot. look at me. i'm not missing my shot. i have another shot. and sylvia in grand rapids could not be happier. just knowing you have come through all this is all that matters. but watch yourself, temptations are everywhere. if hanity offers you napoleon don't eat it. beware those who will tempt you,
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neil, with large trays of sausage and peppers. you don't strike me as a one link at a time guy. really, helen? you would know this how? me and my buddies are already taking bets when you fall off the wagon and have to be rushed to emergency on sugar high. valentine's day, stick a fork in you. you're done. wolf, your last name wouldn't be blitzer, would it? not on your life. kimberly and don in youngstown, ohio. neil, knowing that you've already had cancer, deal with multiple sclerosis every day, now this, we were just wondering, are you playing the lottery these days? we suspect the odds are in your favor. i have given that some thought. you remind me of the kid i used to beat up in grade school. maybe it's that smirk or slap on fake hair but even you deserve a break. so i'll hold off for a week before hating you again. thank you, don.
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i appreciate that. alexander e-mailed look at the bright side, cavuto, you missed all the crazy stuff going on at fox while you were out. what crazy stuff, alexander? did i miss something? thomas in sacramento, i am sorry to hear you're not dead. thomas, i am sorry to hear you have e-mail. maybe you should act more like lisa, who reminds me, she e-mailed a special prayer for me each sbfr day i was away. neil, you are like family and your tv family is glad you are back. thank you, leasea. thanks to all the thousands of you who e-mailed and joked and prayed and chided and many in this room with me right now. i would like to personally thank each and every one of you. i have to be honest, there were many days i was feeling pretty sorry for myself. and then i would hear from so many of you and i dialed back on the self pity party, particularly after hearing from a woman named katie, 78-year-old die-hardy talian chef who said,
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as she put it earlier this summer she was preparing for open heart surgery herself after just losing her husband and only a month after her sister had died. she was going through all of this alone and yet she refused to feel sorry for herself or knme, for that matter whachlt struck me were her closing lines. i am just not prepared to give up, neil. and you shouldn't be either. i heard you once say slief short. go long. well, it's getting shorter. so i suggest you get ahold of yourself and go even longer. so i did. i'm happy to say that katie did as well. she is doing just fine and this might be the reason why. let me quote. my doctor said i shouldn't eat any as many cannolis but he never said i shouldn't eat any cannolis. remember that. everything in moderation. >> well, noted, katie.
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and thank you. let's just say we'll keep this between us and let's not pester dr. schneiderman with you know what. anyway, thank you all, all of you.ag and have a great night. affordable renters insurance. with great coverage it protects my personal belongings should they get damaged, stolen or destroyed. [doorbell] uh, excuse me. delivery. hey. lo mein, szechwan chicken, chopsticks, soy sauce and you got some fortune cookies. have a good one. ah, these small new york apartments... protect your belongings. let geico help you with renters insurance. [cellphone vibrating] do you want to answer that? nah, i'd never with a kid in the car. it's ok. i'm not here. [phone vibrating multiple times] i'm there.
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hello, everyone. i'm dana perino, along with kimberly guilfoyle, juan williams, eric bolling and greg gutfeld. it's labor day weekend. in a presidential year, traditionally marks the start to final push to election day, nine weeks away. trump was in virginia, clinton in florida. trump has taken the lead in a new national poll for the first time since the gop convention, tops clinton by two points in the cnn/orc survey. so, folks, we've got ourselves a tight race right now. over
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